Keith Haring at the Brant Foundation: 8 Important Works


Next week, an exhibition of Keith Haring’s art from the early 1980s opens at the Brant Foundation in New York’s East Village, the neighborhood where the pop and graffiti artist first became famous.

The strict date range is intentional. Co-curators Dieter Buchhart and Anna Karina Hofbauer tell us art news They wanted to focus on Harlin’s formative years, when he still had such strong ties to New York.

“When you read his diaries, it’s amazing how mobile he was,” Hofbauer noted. “By the mid-’80s, he was talking about traveling around the world—Tokyo, Paris, Amsterdam. In the early ’80s, he was still formalizing his vocabulary. Around ’85, he added a new word related to the ongoing AIDS epidemic.” Haring died in 1990 of AIDS-related causes.

Buchhardt and Hofbauer were well versed in the art history of this era. They curated “Basquiat x Warhol” at the Brandt Foundation in 2024, where Buchhardt organized a Basquiat solo exhibition in 2019. Their Keith Haring exhibition includes nearly 50 artworks, many of which were first shown in now-legendary exhibitions at downtown galleries FUN and Tony Shafrazi, as well as alternative art space PS 122. There are large painted tarps, chalk drawings that Haring made on site in New York. A city subway, lots of dancing figures, and even a painted vase.

Below, Buchhardt and Hofbauer discuss some of the most important works of art in “Keith Haring,” on view at the Brandt Foundation from March 11 to May 31.

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